engagement - Lancaster University

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Transcript engagement - Lancaster University

Engaging Students: concepts, practices, resources.

Paul Trowler

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Conceptualising engagement

Student engagement has behavioural, cognitive and affective dimensions, with congruent (conforming) and oppositional (rebellious or innovative) manifestations of each of these. • Our working definition, based on the literature, states that:

Student engagement is the investment of time, effort and other relevant resources by both students and their institutions intended to optimise the student experience and enhance the learning outcomes and development of students, and the performance and reputation of the institution.

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3 foci.....

Individual Student Learning

Structure and Process

Identity

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3 axes

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Behavioural Emotional “Congruent” engagement (conformity)

Attends participates enthusiasm

Non-engagement “Oppositional” engagement (rebellion, innovation)

lectures, Skips lectures without with excuse Boycotts, pickets disrupts lectures or Interest Boredom Rejection

Cognitive

Meets or assignment requirements exceeds Assignments rushed or absent late, Redefines parameters for assignments 5

Please see handout ….. and offer your comments on it

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What’s missing

http://www.pedagogicequality.ac.uk/ Ashwin, P., McLean, M., and Abbas, A. (2012)

Quality and Inequality in Undergraduate Courses: A guide for national and institutional

policy makers. Nottingham: University of

Nottingham.

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Educational ideology

• •

Market Model of Student Engagement (MMSE)

(http://www.pedagogicequality.ac.uk/timeline.php#workingpapers )

Developmental Model of Student Engagement (DMSE).

(there is also a social reconstructionist model and a traditionalist model) Difficult to move all the way along May’s Stages of Engagement for each of these under the MMSE:

Consultation – Involvement – Participation - Partnership

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Engagement for what?

• • • • Engagement to improve learning Engagement for curricular relevance Engagement for democratisation and participation Engagement for equality / social justice / inclusivity • • • • Engagement to improve throughput rates and retention Engagement for institutional benefit Engagement as marketing Engagement for value-for-money 9

Some pointers....

• • • • • • • • The DEEP Project (Documenting Effective Educational Practices) – a collaboration between the National Survey of Student Engagement and the American Association for Higher Education) (Kezar 2005: 2-4) documents

leadership characteristics common across engaged / engaging institutions

, such as Developing a shared understanding of institutional mission and philosophy; Building a strong sense of community; Modelling collaboration and distributed leadership through shared governance; Ensuring that students have a prominent voice in campus governance; Adopting structures which encourage cross-functional activities focussed on student success; Tightening the philosophical and operational linkages between academic and student affairs; Empowering and supporting academic leadership; Creating and capitalising on cross-functional, boundary-spanning activities. 10

The Leadership Foundation Study....

Engagement Champions in senior roles......(empowering and supporting leadership) “The opportunity for

students to have a voice, to be co-producers in all aspects of their education and the university and its wider community

… is something we’ve been focused on as the students union for a long time, but I must say

since the arrival of [the current VC] we’ve had a real commitment.

We have had a commitment from senior leadership prior to that, but it

tended to be solely in the area of the academic experience…

We’re in a fantastic position now and the university is really committed to making sure the student voice is heard.” (Student Leader)

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The Leadership Foundation Study....

Building community and shared understandings...

Most of that is about inspiring engagement, by

people to an extent seeing that it’s about partnership. It may start with respect and develop into something more jointly owned.

I think often it starts with a power relationship and then it builds into something which is much more equal.

(Senior Manager)”

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Different agendas…..

“What the University wants from [student engagement] is

some instrumental things,

a more satisfied student population as measured, it wants a more successful student population, so it wants a student population that loses less students, so it wants all of those instrumental measures of success. But increasingly the University recognises that t

he only way to get there is to achieve a more participative environment, a more supportive environment, a more positive environment…

and thus for those things to emerge… …I’m saying to Deans and [other senior managers] the reason for going down this road of engaging with students and trying to an extent frame expectations but also meet expectations and create a more partnered environment is that it will help you achieve your financial bottom line because you’ll lose less students. S

I think you can have people on the same journey for different motivations and I don’t think that matters particularly. What matters is the journey.”

(Senior Manager)

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Industrial relations metaphor….

I’ve spent a lot of my life involved in studying trade unions and the management of staff in universities and elsewhere, and there are

parallel concepts of employee engagement a

nd there are objects of trade union activism. It strikes me that all these things are about

partnership and cooperation and working together.

You can’t do it on your own. Students can’t be engaged on their own. They have to have someone willingly engaging with them. (Senior Leader)

(Heckscher’s work: http://www.heckscher.com/ ) 14

Success factors 1…

• • • • •

Bringing student representatives onto all kinds of university structures

, including those concerned with changes to systems, structures or processes (such as building project boards) in material ways – such as equal numbers of staff and students on programme committees.

GOAT

(go out and talk) &

GOAL

(go out and listen) - speaking informally, and often, to leaders and representatives of other sectors (students, senior managers, staff leaders, etc), to gauge their feelings and views, and developing strong personal relationships based on mutual respect Actively

involving the university in students’ union activities

Ensuring that the

student representative system is really representative of all constituencies

within the student body, including “invisible” groups such as part-time students, student parents or students from elsewhere

Active student involvement in the selection of senior managers with a high level of personal commitment to student engagement

holding them accountable to this commitment – and then 15

• • • • • • • •

Success factors 2….

Reviewing procedures

to ensure that these don’t themselves give rise to problems or complaints, and lightening the bureaucratic load “

Closing the feedback loop

” – ensuring that everybody sees the results and can celebrate the “wins” of engagement For managers and staff, wanting to

see things from students’ perspectives

, and being genuinely committed to ensuring students have a positive experience at university Shifting the official policies to reflect a genuine prioritisation of partnership and community, and the prioritisation of student engagement, and ensuring

consistent messages from senior management Not being A Manager

– working against a “managerial” image to connect in a way that is meaningful to students / staff Replacing a culture of compliance with

a culture of permission, tolerating “mess” and uncertainty Dogged persistence

until the mindset and the culture change, so that collaborative approaches become automatic and can be self-sustaining “

Finding the right people

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Getting there: bridge metaphor

...allows specifics of starting place, for the environment, the climate, the terrain. “Journeys” are seldom simply unproblematic linear progressions from one point to another. Metaphor also permits the possibility of retreat back along one’s path, or for facilitating the passage of those who follow.

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Need to think about

The three dimensions of student engagement…..

Where are we now on each of these and what do we want to change (and how)?

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Bridge design....

• • • Salience (how important engagement

initiatives are in relation to the many others coming at staff and students)

Congruence (how they fit in, or don’t, with

current practices)

Profitability (how far current sets of interests

and priorities are met, and how these can be altered)

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Recommendations

Student engagement needs to be a thorough-going

commitment throughout the university

if it is to be sustainable. While pockets of “good practice” are useful for modelling and inspiring, without a genuine commitment from leaders in all sectors and at all levels of the university, student engagement runs the risk of being “the next big thing” shuffled off the agenda once something else comes along.

• Student engagement has at its root

mutual respect.

Without trust, a willingness to share power in appropriate ways struggles against inhibition and reluctance. True partnership shares responsibility as well as authority.

Community matters

. Beyond the partnership, the sense of belonging to something greater than one’s programme, one’s department or one’s university provides investment, involvement and purpose in an outward facing direction. • Students are inspired by staff who are inspired.

Student engagement requires engaged staff – of all kinds

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Reflection…

Salience: how important is this student engagement initiative in your institution compared to other initiatives? – Congruence: Which of the approaches to student engagement do you wish to enhance in your institution? Is it the most congruent with the character of the place in terms of current practices?

Profitability: In what ways would these intended changes benefit the various groups involved: staff; students; managers? Would the benefits be obvious to them? If not, what might persuade them of these benefits?

What change strategies can you adopt that are likely to shift established practices in the desired direction? – Consider the success factors compared with the situation at your institution. What needs to be addressed?

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Resources

Our HEA reports....

• http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/resources/detail/studentengagement/Research_and_ev idence_base_for_student_engagement

Our LFHE Reports…

• http://www.lfhe.ac.uk/research/smallprojects/sdp2011successfulprojects.html

Sakai Engagement site:

https://sakai.lancs.ac.uk

(login with username: [email protected] and password: welcome) NUS Engagement toolkit:

• http://www.nusconnect.org.uk/campaigns/highereducation/student engagement/toolkit/

NSSE and AUSSE……..

http://nsse.iub.edu/ • • http://www.acer.edu.au/research/ausse DEEP Project guides: http://nsse.iub.edu/_/?cid=128 Paul Hamlyn Project Report: Building Student Engagement for Retention and Success 22

Our Leadership for Engagement Toolkit

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